Posted: Fri Aug 21, 2009 1:57 am
Now for a cleaner dyno curve. This is the R34 with the GT3071R turbo, Z32 AFM and 480CC Nismo injectors now added... rising from 219rwkw with factory turbs to 278rwkw with this one and supporting mods
Nistune is a real-time tuning suite designed especially for Nissan vehicles
https://nistune.com/forum/
I have the same problem on CA18det before 3500rpm the injection time is good, and after that it is devided by 2 on consult... do you know why ??PL wrote:Oh, forgot...
Duty cycle went to 45% at 7000rpm. Which is obviously rubbish.
I just went through the raw log file and injection time is actually being logged as 7.7ms max. Which I assume is out by a factor of 2.
Z32 AFM went to 4.6V max which sounds about right for 280rwkw.
PL
Does RB25 neo do the same? Why cant it remain sequental at high rpm?PL wrote:I'll leave that one for Matt but it may have to do with how CA's go from sequential to batch fired injection at a certain RPM/load.
PL
That's some interesting info, thanks. Why cannot they stay sequentially injected at higher revs?PL wrote:Hi Petros,
I'm not sure if the RB25's go batch fired up top. The only ones I've seen do it are the CA18's. On the bench there's a distinct chnage in the sound the injectors make. I can only assume that it's so they can get good resolution at low load and then they fire the injectors twice as often up high when you need lots of fuel.
All the SR20 turbo ECU's use batch fire all the time.
Well, I'd like to post dyno graphs here - but unfortunately i can't! Dyno operator promised to send dyno printouts by email, but never did.I'd be interested in seeing some dyno curves for what can be achieved with std turbo. All reports I've heard say that there's not much point trying to turn boost up much over std.
I have seen some claims made by Australian and NZ head porters that RB25 head has better low lift intake flow and better exhaust flow than RB26 head. Like this:The NEO's certainly seem to be a much better head design than the older RB25. A local guy has done quite a bit of work to his and he reckons the NEO head has many similarities with the RB26 head. Which would explain why they flow so well.
Taken here: http://www.performanceforums.com/forums ... t=67236980. I don't know who is this guy, but figures look good stock and can be easily improved upon even further (unlike toyota JZs with their assymetrical ports and poorer flow figures in both stock and modified form)TK wrote:My stock valve RB25 v's RB26 with 1mm os valves:
Intake
Lift Flow(rb26) flow(rb25)
.1 -- 81.1 -- 89.2
.2 -- 164.9 -- 172.4
.3 -- 232.2 -- 223.4
.4 -- 265.9 -- 257.2
.45 -- 272.7 -- 267.5
Exhaust
.1 -- 75.6 -- 76.7
.2 -- 134.9 -- 140.1
.3 -- 160.9 -- 185.4
.4 -- 173.8 -- 197.8
.45 -- 178.9 -- 199.8
Which raises a question as to why did not nissan put warmer cams on their turbo engines in the first place. Maybe some ecological reasons?Apparently they respond very well to a set of mild cams (like any Nissan turbo engine it seems!). That would be the next logical step for Matt's car but he's already spent quite a bit of cash on it and it goes quite well with 280rwkw. It'd be tempting to go for 300 with cams. And I suspect it'd be quite achievable but it'd really only be spending money to get a number...
Not that there's anything wrong with that!
PL
That is the main concern with "problem cars" or any cars that are tempting to modify. I'm thinking of buying something like corolla or micra - boring, absolutely unmodifiable, dedicated winter car before doing anything serious to skyline.Matt wrote:Nah I'll do it once my problem car (R31) has been sorted out. Need to drive something...